Shapes: Hearts

I was looking for a four-leaf clover when I found this field of heart-leaf clover.

Colors: Yellow (and blue)

This common wildflower is called White Mustard.

Colors: Yellow


In the summer of 1992 I spent about 3 weeks ministering in a small village in Estonia. Due to their exorbitant price of about $0.50 per pound, it was rare for the locals to buy more than one or two bananas at a time. Since the bananas were shipped in from Costa Rica or Honduras (I don’t remember which now), they were both exotic and expensive by local standards.

This small bit of information was unknown to me as I perused the limited fruit offerings in the local market, which consisted mostly of various wild berries gathered from the nearby forests. Since bananas are decidedly higher than wild berries on the list of fruit I like, and considering they were only $0.50 per pound, I grabbed a couple pounds, dropped a dollar on the counter and was on my way.

Little did I know that I had just sent shock waves through the little village. I had no idea that buying a dollar’s worth of bananas and strolling through the village with them in open view would say, “I’m a high roller!” A Mercedes, maybe. But a handful of bananas?

In Israel, bananas are locally produced and are viewed a bit differently than in Estonia. They are available here year round with only occasional lulls in quantity and quality. And, unlike Estonia circa 1992, they are not a status symbol here.

Colors: Green


These green apples are now in season. They are grown in the northernmost area of the country in the Golan Heights by Druze famers. Something like 70% of Druze farmers produce apples.

This year, like last, about 1/5 of the apple harvest will be shipped to Syria, which helps keep the apple prices from falling too low in Israel, and some hope it will raise the possibility of peace with Syria.

I’m more confident the former is more likely to be accomplished than the latter.

Security Update

Many of our friends in the USA worry about our safety here in Israel. Seemingly, every news report from Israel is one that gives them cause to worry that there is “war going on everywhere.”

For those who are worried about us, please take a close look at the above photo. The three ladies in the photo are soldiers in the Border Guard of the Israel Defense Forces.

Soldiers like them are stationed at all the main entrances of the main market in Jerusalem, and preventing terrorists from entering the market is their objective. I’m not going to unfold all the security strategies implemented in that job, but I will make this observation: playing the scratch and lose lottery isn’t one of their authorized strategies.

I gather from their lack of attention to who is coming and going in the market that they have not received any security warnings, and that they are fairly relaxed about the overall security situation in Jerusalem at this time. However, they may just be bad soldiers. I’m hoping the former and not the latter is the case.